Haunted Ladies Literary Club by Teri-Lynn Hope

New Paranormal Amateur Sleuth Murder Mystery Series

Haunted Ladies Literary Club Cozy Paranormal Amateur Sleuth Mystery by Teri Lynn HopeMary Shelley and fellow famous women authors, Jane Austen, Emily Brontë, and Charlotte Brontë make appearances at the core of the debut novel by Teri-Lynn Hope, Haunted Ladies Literary Club, touted as the first of a series of cozy ghost-guided murder mysteries by amateur sleuth Teri-Lynn Hope, which, in an intriguing literary device includes the author as the main character in her own story.

In Haunted Ladies Literary Club, aspiring American novelist Teri Lynn Hope relocates to the picturesque English village of Great Brinsley Green, hoping the town’s literary history will inspire her stalled romance writing. What she doesn’t expect is to find herself a suspect in the bizarre murder of a neighbor, marked by gruesome Jack the Ripper-style clues. As Teri struggles to clear her name, she receives some very unusual help—from the ghosts of literary icons Jane Austen, Mary Shelley, and the Brontë sisters. Their bickering over everything from love to punctuation is as entertaining as it is frustrating, but these famous ghosts are determined to help Teri solve the crime and even guide her toward personal growth.

As the mystery deepens, so do Teri’s insights into her own grief, isolation, and identity as a writer. Set against the atmospheric backdrop of a quaint yet eerie village, Haunted Ladies Literary Club masterfully combines suspense, humor, and supernatural intrigue. Teri’s journey is filled with witty dialogue, eerie settings, and poignant reflections on creativity and loss. Teri-Lynn Hope’s novel is a captivating read for fans of literary history, cozy mysteries, and the paranormal.

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The true adventure of young King Edward III, “The Boy King’s Tale: as Told by Geoffrey Chaucer”

Paperback Cover Boy King's Tale Young King Edward III and Philippa of HainautJust in the nick of time for the coronation of King Charles III, interest in the British monarchy is on the front page with constant stories about the spare, Prince Harry and all the royal family drama comes a new historical novel of the original royal family drama that stood at the crux of absolute monarchy and the parliamentary democracy of modern life, “whether we live by rule-of-law or whim of capricious overlord”.  One night in 1330, a young king and his wife were targeted for murder to put an infant prince on the thrown, so others could control the destiny of one of the world’s powers.

“The Boy King’s Tale: as Told by Geoffrey Chaucer” a new historical fictionalized biographical novel by the author of “Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley” and “Aces: a novel of Pilots in WWII”, Michael January, is an entertaining and engaging visionary through medieval England. The story follows the young life of King Edward III as he is anointed as the “boy king” when his mother and her lover plot to take the crown from his father, Edward II, and must navigate the treacherous political landscape of the time. The novel is told by the great storyteller Geoffrey Chaucer as one of his “tales”.

Young Edward is kept separated from his father by his mother Queen Isabella, daughter of the King of France, who now hates her husband because he has abandoned her bed for a series of male “favorites”. Mortimer, a charismatic Lord of England who has declared himself to be the Earl of March, guarding the border with Wales, is being held in the Tower of London and scheduled to lose his head. Isabella, secretly in love with him, helps him escape to France where they raise an army, cross the channel and defeat her husband, having him murdered in his prison cell, and putting her teenage son on the throne so they can jointly rule by a council they control.

When the young King Edward leads an army to war, he meets teenage Philippa of Hainaut, who will be the love of his life against the forces fighting against him, and he must outwit his enemies to make it so, but his temper and will lead him deeper into the traps set for him, when his uncle’s execution is engineered. In jealousy and blame, he believes his mother’s lies that Philippa has been unfaithful, leading to one fateful night, on the eve of his turning 18, when Parliament is on the verge of granting him full rights. Mortimer plans to murder him, the same as his father, and his young wife as well to put their infant son on the throne and rule as a dictator. Edward discovers the plot, but can he save his bride Philippa and himself locked without friends at Nottingham Castle, facing a knife’s edge moment that will change England forever? A celebration of young love and a boy seeking a father, who takes one as a friend who would betray his trust, and must realize the truth before his fate is sealed.

The Boy King's Tale Review Quotes and Awards

The author’s two favorite review quotes: “This story was unlike anything I’ve ever read before!  …the storyline and the twists and turns, it was just great. I loved the writing style…it made the reading experience amazing!” from an 18-year-old girl in the UK, and “They are some books you enjoy and forget, then, there are some books you devour, inhale and BREATHE. The Boy King’s Tale is one of those books.”

Some Other Review Quotes

“A story redolent with intrigues, battles, and psychological warfare, beautifully written.  For anyone that loves tales of knights, derring-do, and chivalry, a fantastic read but also for anyone who just enjoys a rollicking good story!” Reader’s Favorite 5-Star Review

“Intermingles the historical fiction details and tantalizing character portraits, steeped with fast-paced betrayal and intrigue. The storyline portrays intense conflict within an authentic setting, and the novel stays grounded while balancing evocative details with accurate period vernacular.” Publisher’s Weekly Booklife Prize

“The Boy King’s Tale: as Told by Geoffrey Chaucer” by Michael January receives five stars and our “Highly Recommended” Award of Excellence. The author does a remarkable job of showing the entwining story of two vastly different loves… all enmeshed in the story of Edward II’s fall and the resulting political turmoil. The characters come alive, emoting real human emotions: abandonment, pain, fear, and ultimately, love, courage, and strength. An unputdownable must-read for anyone interested in this medieval world…a remarkable historical novel.” Historical Fiction Company

“An entertaining, well-written account of a time so long ago.” Kirkus Reviews

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New Paperback Edition of Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley

A new paperback edition of “Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley: Frankenstein Diaries” with an updated cover is available for bookstores and libraries through Ingramspark and through Amazon. The cover is of Mary Shelley as she writes her book and dreams of her visit to the castle on the Rhine where her experiences would suggest a story to her. The novel tells the story of Mary Godwin’s elopement with Percy Shelley and Mary’s step-sister Claire Clairmont on a journey of discovery as they walk across France to Switzerland.

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Is this a “lost” portrait of Mary Jane Clairmont Godwin?

Mrs Godwin (?) Portrait at Chawton House

On a recent visit to Chawton House in Hampshire England, most familiarly known for its connection to Jane Austen, I came across this portrait. The Chawton House library has obtained a collection of the writings of early woman travel writers, referred to as The Centre for the Study of Early Women’s Writing, 1600–1830, including Mary Shelley and her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft.

This oil on canvas original painting hangs in an upper hallway. One might expect it to be in the National Portrait Gallery or some other vaunted institution of collection, but you have to go to Hampshire to see it. A card below the painting asks, “Could this be Mary Wollstonecraft?” Two cards provide its uncertain provenance and clues.

“Portrait of a lady said to be Mrs. Godwin, née Wollstonecraft (1759-1797) Attributed to George Beare (1725-1749)  Oil on Canvas 1792 (?)”

“Is this Mary Wollstonecraft, famous women’s rights writer. The answer remains a mystery. At auction, it was attributed to George Beare and said to be ‘Mrs Godwin, authoress, 1792’ (as per a faint inscription on the front). She does not closely resemble the known portrait by John Opie and George Beare died 10 years before Wollstonecraft was born.”

“Her ‘mob cap’ is characteristic of the late 1780s, so it is unlikely that George Beare painted it. Another label on the back attributes it to John Downman RA, a plausible possibility as he was working in London at this time.”

I agree that the subject of the portrait bears little resemblance to any known likenesses of Mary Shelley’s mother, Mary Wollstonecraft. But it does seem to bear a resemblance to someone else in the Godwin household. I’ll let you be the judge.

The attribution to George Beare I think can easily be dismissed, while John Downman, who was a prolific painter of portraits, in admittedly different styles, could be accurate. But what of the reference “said to be Mrs Godwin, authoress, 1792 (?).” What if it is indeed Mrs Godwin, however not the first, but the second, Mary Jane Clairmont Godwin, Mary Shelley’s stepmother?

If the date of 1792 is correct, this is negative evidence, as Mary Jane Clairmont was of no notoriety at that time. But if the other characteristics are considered, perhaps the date (?) is off.

In the portrait, she is holding a book in her hands, clearly suggesting her connection to writing, or publishing. Of the precious little we know of Mary Jane Clairmont’s physical look, is that her daughter had brown hair, and a brief comment in Mary Shelley’s History of a Six Weeks Tour, a French hotel page referred to her as “a fat lady’. How he may have meant that is open to interpretation, but the woman in the portrait is not slight or thin.

After her marriage to William Godwin in 1801, four years after the death of Wollstonecraft, the Godwins opened their publishing business, The M.J. Godwin Juvenile Library. The business first opened in 1805 off Oxford Street and relocated to 41 Skinner Street in 1807, registered in her name. William Godwin was well known in the literati circle, for his writing and his philosophical bent, but his wife was now a London publisher. They published the Swiss Family Robinson (1816) and other works that came to some prominence, including the Charles and Mary Lamb’s volumes of Shakespear. Though the business struggled later, in the years of its beginning must have been of some notoriety. Mary Jane Godwin was an editor and nominal writer on her own, so a reference to “authoress” is not out of line, or connected to a mistaken identification as Wollstonecraft.

It would seem quite natural that an artist like Downman might be persuaded to paint the wife of a prominent London literary figure like Godwin and a formidable person on her own. And in the first decade of the Juvenile Library, the money for a portrait paid by the business earnings seems reasonable.

If this were indeed M. J. Godwin and not Mary Wollstonecraft the date would likely be around 1806 to 1812. This could easily be within the timeframe John Downman was in London, presenting his works in exhibits. The “mob cap” for older women was still in style into the 1820s with added lace popular beginning around 1800. The cap in this portrait appears to have lace as a prominent feature of its fashionable design and the proud dress of the middle-class is unlike the more egalitarian simple style of Wollstonecraft.

Mrs Godwin ? Mystery Portrait Comparison

Comparison of “Mrs Godwin” at Chawton House and two known portraits of Mary Wollstonecraft by John Opie

For the other “evidence” we would have to rely on the visual. If we look at the portrait in question in comparison to the known portraits of Wollstonecraft, painted by John Opie, one painted within a year of Wollstonecraft’s death in childbirth, said by Mary to be painted while she was pregnant with her, they look wholly different. If we then compare the painting of “Mrs Godwin” with the known portrait of Claire Clairmont, the resemblance is striking, while the quality of the Clairmont portrait is somewhat less.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is mrs_godwin_and_claire_frd.jpg
Comparison of “Mrs Godwin” at Chawton House to Claire Clairmont

Is this comparison conclusive? Clearly not, and as mysterious as the question of its being Wollstonecraft, it seems to me well within the realm of possibility that a “lost” portrait of Mary Jane Vail Godwin née Clairmont, London publisher, editor and step-mother of Mary Shelley, authoress of Frankenstein, has lain misidentified for two centuries. You be the judge.

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Christie’s Auctions Original Frankenstein

Frankenstein Original Edition in Three VolumesNow you can buy your own copy of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s Frankenstein for about a quarter-million dollars. Update: It actually sold for $1.17 million! What is referred to as the “Manney Copy” of the original 1818 edition of Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus in three volumes, from the first 500 run printing from Lackington, Hughes, which went on sale January 1, 1818, at the Temple of the Muses. According to Christie’s, the copies are exceptionally rare, and the only set to appear at auction since 1985 when they were bought by Richard Manney, who then auctioned them at Christie’s in 1991. The books are being sold from the Literature Collection of Theodore B. Baum. described as being in unsophisticated, crisp, and clean condition. Manney was in the advertising field, a buyer for media companies. An avid collector, he said he had 10,000 books he collected from his youth, and the Mary Shelley Frankenstein was among 600 books he auctioned at Christie’s for about $4 million.

The catalog description: “Three volumes, 12mo (190 x 109mm). Half-titles and advertisements in each volume (a few light spots at ends, neat erasures from verso of each title page, and from vol 3 inside front cover). Original blue-gray boards, drab paper spines, printed spine labels, uncut (light wear to spines, with scattered tiny chips at joints and to vol. 2 spine label, 1cm repaired tear to vol. 1 spine); dark blue morocco pull-off case by Riviere with enclosed asbestos lining, chemises. Provenance: E.L.A. Bibl. (ink stamp on verso of each title page) – Richard Manney (his sale, Sotheby’s, 11 October 1991, lot 283).”

This is one of the most significant literature auctions in 30 years. Other books offered from The Exceptional Literature Collection of Theodore B. Baum of 173 lots include five Jane Austen first editions, three from Charlotte Bronte,  a Mutiny on the Bounty, Lord Byron’s Don Juan, Don Quixote, five of Charles Dickens, three Arthur Conan Doyles, Shakespeare, Melville, Dostoyevsky, Darwin’s Origin of the Species, Alexandre Dumas, among others.

The estimated auction price, between $200,000 and $300,000. The auction is scheduled for September 14, 2021.

Christies Baum Literary Auction

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Mary Shelley’s Seduction: Who was seducer and who seduced?

!9th Century Seduction Scene -Byron and ClaireIn present times we tend to have a modern revisionist view of human behavior in the past. Some behavior in relationships and sex seems a constant from ancient forgotten times to the present, but the rules of society, the prism through which we view them as acceptable or taboo changes and shifts. What was common to men and women in days of old has new meaning in the age of #metoo. I was recently reminded of this in a discussion of the movie version of Mary Shelley. The thematic premise of which seemed to be how Mary was seduced by Percy only to find out later he was married, and Claire was seduced and abandoned by a libertine Bryon, and that Mary was deliberately denied credit for writing Frankenstein because she was a woman. While the question of credit due for Frankenstein’s authorship is a complex subject, especially in a time when anonymous publication was fairly common and the risk to social reputation was as much a consideration as any financial reward, and deeply bound in the difficult search for a publisher for a manuscript rejected several times, I’ll stick to the seduction discussion.

I find it odd that what is intended to be a feminist view of a patriarchy chooses to make women so weak in character that they are unable to make deliberate choices in their own lives, at the mercy of scheming cads. In the recent movie version of the story, Shelley and Mary meet in Scotland, she falls for him, then later discovers! he is married. And then, that Shelley encourages Mary to be pursued by Hogg in some kind of free love invitation which horrifies Mary when Hogg seems to chase her around the furniture. This architecture is inaccurate at best, and disingenuously revisionist.

Mary, of course, knew that Shelley was married before she ever met him. He was in continual correspondence with her father William Godwin, and supplying Godwin with financial assistance when Mary was as young as fourteen. Mary first met Shelley when he came to visit Skinner Street with his new bride, Harriet Westbrook. It was with Harriet that Shelley had eloped with to Scotland, where they married privately and then remarried in London at a formal ceremony, where the Godwins may have been witnesses. Percy Shelley had been a visitor to Skinner Street while Mary was away in Scotland with the Baxters, during which time Mary’s half-sister Fanny developed an infatuation with him, which was superseded by Mary’s attraction to him in the spring of 1814, leading to the elopement trip to Paris.

Harriet Shelley, as the aggrieved wife, accused Mary as the romantic schemer, writing at the time that, “Mary was determined to seduce him, she is to blame. She heated his imagination by talking of her mother, and going to her grave with him every day, till at last she told him she was dying in love for him.” This is hardly the picture of the unwitting naïve waif presented in the film version of the story.

As for Thomas Jefferson Hogg, he was more infatuated with Shelley’s wife, Harriet, than he was with Mary. It had been Harriet who Hogg had pursued with an intensity of ardor that seems to be the inspiration for the chasing around furniture, and rebuffed by her. As for Mary, he was her confidante during the difficult days of pregnancy and the tragic loss of her first child, a time when Shelley was desperately dodging creditors. Shelley is notoriously on record as suggesting in the spirit of their shared philosophy of “free love”, that Mary could be with Hogg. Shelley meant this as an expression of freedom for her, that she enjoyed Hogg’s company and if they were true to their ideals he would not stand to the way. Mary rejected this idea outright, having no expressed desire for anyone beyond Shelley. If she did have a romantic thought for someone outside her relationship with Shelley it would have been Byron, with whom she seemed to share a sympathetic temperament and a respect of his talent. But any thought of a physical liaison had been tempered by her step-sister Claire’s difficult relation with Bryon.

In the film version, this is treated as Byron seducing and then abandoning Claire. However, it is much more likely that it was Claire who deliberately sought out Byron, who already had the public reputation of “mad, bad and dangerous to know”, from his scandalous affair with Caroline Lamb. Claire had an early infatuation with Byron as a famous figure of the time, like a modern girl might with a pop star. Claire (her actual given name was Jane, but she took on Claire as a romantic affectation), had an interest in the theater and sought an introduction to Bryon when he was a director of the Drury Lane Theatre. Drawing on her family connection to William Godwin and an introduction, very likely through Bryon’s publisher John Murray, she had delivered to him a copy of her, then and forever lost, unpublished manuscript of “The Idiot” or Ideot, written following the elopement trip with Mary and Percy, asking that he might consider it for a play and give her his reaction as a mentor, as many a young hopeful writer of today seeks out a peek at an over the transom unsolicited submission.

She went to see him to gain his response and later wrote of the sad treatment he had given as his reaction to her writing. Whether on this visit, he, like a Regency Harvey Weinstein demanded a sexual payment for her naïve theatrical ambitions, or instead, like a romantically infatuated groupie, she seduced him, I think is entirely open to conjecture. Claire had demonstrated a willfulness toward a sexual freedom notion of “free love” that was much more literal than the more intellectual ideas held by Shelley and Godwin, which was more about the financial strictures of legal marriage than it was about sex. In either case, the result was a pregnancy after apparently one brief encounter on a theatre office or London hotel residence casting couch.

It was Claire who then designed to pursue Bryon with the intent to snare his name in marriage with the evidence of the child growing in her. Claire suggested the trip to Geneva to introduce them to Bryon. Whether Mary or Shelley were aware of Claire’s intent is unknown, but it is clear that once the pregnancy was revealed to Lord Byron, he wanted nothing to do with a continued relationship with her. He agreed to financially support the resulting child, but his interest in the mother was less than nil. Byron’s temperament and Mary’s were much more compatible, and he likely felt much less a risk of his fortunes in a friendship with her than Claire.

Their friendship, even from afar, would continue until Byron’s death, with Mary caretaking the publication of his work along with Shelley’s, and a fondness in their Italy travels, even as Shelley’s relationship with Byron had become strained.

As for Shelley and Claire, whether he ever had a sexual relationship with her is also a matter of two-hundred years of conjecture. Mary herself insisted vehemently that they did not. Could she have been naïve about it, willingly blind, or just publicly defensive, protesting loudly to assuage the rumors? Maybe. Shelley clearly enjoyed Claire’s company at some level. She was less serious than Mary, more frivolous, and they could share ribald humor together that Mary chided as disgusting. Shelley was more amused by Claire’s antics than Mary, who seemed to view their life in each other’s constant company as mostly annoying. The salacious scandal rumors at the time among London gossips, the equivalent of tabloids, were that William Godwin had “sold” both of his daughters to Shelley, and every form of lascivious behavior was attributed to them. It had even been suggested that Claire’s daughter Ianthe was Shelley’s child and not Byron’s, but none of the actual participants ever accepted this.

Did Percy Shelley sleep with Claire or encourage an orgy of free love? This is a question Mary clearly answers in her Secret Memoirs, at least up to that point in her story and found at the heart of their journey.

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Mary Wollstonecraft Gets a Statue on the Green

Mary Wollstonecraft Silver StatureMary Wollstonecraft, the “Mother of Feminism” is honored with a statue on Newington Green, near where she lived in North London, sculpted by artist Maggi Hambling. And much like Wollstonecraft herself during her lifetime, the silver nude form chosen by the artist and the committee who labored for ten years to fund it has brought shock, consternation, and considerable hum-humming. (Photo Jill Mead/The Guardian)

It has been described as a “silvery naked everywoman figure emerging free and defiantly from a swirling mingle of female forms”. And if art is intended to elicit discussion and interpretation, it seems to have achieved that, with comments of “insulting”, “bad” and “bizarre”, though I’m sure somewhere it might be called “inspiring”.  The statue unveiled on Tuesday, November 9, 2020, cost £143,000, raised by volunteers of the Mary on the Green Campaign.

Mary Wollstonecraft PortraitSince its unveiling, the statue has been mistakenly confused with Wollstonecraft’s daughter, Mary Shelley in some comments and hearty discussion of its merits, something which its sculptor is apparently used to. The sculpture is said by its creator as not intended to be a likeness of its honoree, and it clearly is not, though one wonders what Wollstonecraft herself would think of a statuesque nude with a decidedly pinched face as a representation of feminism. If a sculptor wanted to provide a likeness, there are several portraits of Wollstonecraft painted in her lifetime.

She certainly felt freedom in representing the nature of womanhood, causing a sensation with her writing of breastfeeding her daughter, Fanny Imlay, while touring Norway. She possibly posed for the reclining nearly nude female figure in Fuseli’s famous painting “Nightmare”, originally inspired by an earlier relationship, but later painted in different versions. The revelation of her affair with the artist in William Godwin’s biography of her, which also revealed a suicide attempt, caused her to be ridiculed and relegated to near obscurity by proper English society after her death from complications in the birth of her daughter, Mary (Shelley). Mary Shelley would choose to take her mother’s name, Wollstonecraft, as an identity, rather than her father’s, Godwin, even though they had married by the time of her birth.

In ‘Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley” this relationship to her mother is explored in Mary’s search for understanding of her mother’s life, one of the driving emotions which took her to Paris in the elopement with Percy Shelly in 1814. Her mother had written first-hand accounts of the French Revolution and had conceived her half-sister Fanny in a romance with American Gilbert Imlay while living in Paris. Mary would also discover pride in her mother that, though Wollstonecraft was obscured in England, her ideas of freedom for women had gained recognition abroad among women of the upper-class society, most affected by arranged marriages and the codified laws of male primacy.

It was her argument for the education of women to free them from the bonds of reliance on marriage for economic sustenance in the “Vindication of the Rights of Women” that made her the mother of feminism. One wonders if that idea can be seen in the rather forthright yet sterile form of a gleaming nude figure in a park where kids might point and ask “who’s that naked lady” as their mothers might be more motivated to cover their eyes than begin a discussion of the concepts of the equal rights of women.

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Shelley & Byron Lore House on Lake Geneva for Sale

mary_shelley_plaque_nernierAn historic property on the shore of Lake Geneva associated with the lives of Percy and Mary Shelley and Lord Byron is offered for sale for €2.7 million. A plaque on the house declares that Mary Shelley wrote some pages of Frankenstein there in April of 1816. Short of the known facts that Mary did not start Frankenstein until after June of 1816, and did not arrive in Geneva from Paris until May of 1816, the house is surely connected to the travels of Percy Shelley and Lord Byron.

​The now custom designed four bedroom home with beautiful lake views of the Jura Mountains is located in Nernier, Haute Savoie France, on the southern shore of Lac Leman and dates back to 1739. In Percy Shelley’s journals, he reports that on his boating trip with Lord Byron as his companion to circumnavigate the lake while Mary remained with Claire in the house they had rented, one of their first stops was at Nernier. Percy had noted that Polidori was unable to join them on their trip, due to an ankle sprain. The trip continued to the Chateau Chillon on the Swiss side, which inspired Byron’s Prisoner of Chillon.

nernier_house_shelleyThe present house at the time in 1816 was an auberge guest inn for travelers around the lake. It has been reconstructed into a modern four bedroom single family home on upper and lower floors, which had been owned for many years by a French family, who have decided to sell, now that children have grown and moved away.

The property is situated on the harbor’s edge in the little medieval village of Nernier, about twelve miles from the Cologny neighborhood where the Villa Diodati is to be found, and across the lake from the Chateau Coppet, where Shelley and Byron visited Madame DeStael. The house can be reached by road from Geneva along the lake, or a ferry crosses the lake from Nyon on the Swiss northern shore to Yvoire on the French south shore. The winter ski resort of Portes du Soleil is an hour’s drive away.

nernier_house_interiorThe house is described by the real estate listing with Leggett Prestige as having an entrance hall on the ground floor with an open-plan kitchen, dining and living area and a balcony with idyllic views across the lake. The first floor has an office area and lounge with a fireplace and another balcony. The second floor has a landing with a built-in double closet and two bedrooms, one with its own balcony.

At the time of Shelley and Byron’s stay there he described it in rather a different frame:

“Leaving Hermance, we arrived at sunset at the village of Nerni. After looking at our lodgings, which were gloomy and dirty, we walked out by the side of the lake. It was beautiful to see the vast expanse of these purple and misty waters broken by the craggy islets near to its slant beached margin. There were many fish sporting in the lake, and multitudes were collected close to the rocks to catch the flies which inhabited them.

On returning to the village, we sat on a wall beside the lake, looking at some children who were playing at a game like ninepins. The children here appeared in an extraordinary way deformed and diseased. Most of them were crooked, and with enlarged throats; but one little boy had such exquisite grace in his mien and motions, as I never before saw equaled in a child. His countenance was beautiful for the expression with which it overflowed. There was a mixture of pride and gentleness in his eyes and lips, the indications of sensibility, which his education will probably pervert to misery or seduce to crime; but there was more of gentleness than of pride, and it seemed that the pride was tamed from its original wildness by the habitual exercise of milder feelings.

My companion (Byron) gave him a piece of money, which he took without speaking, with a sweet smile of easy thankfulness, and then with an unembarrassed air turned to his play. The imagination surely could not forbear to breathe into the most inanimate forms some likeness of its own visions, on such a serene and glowing evening, in this remote and romantic village, beside the calm lake that bore us hither.

On returning to our inn, we found that the servant had arranged our rooms, and deprived them of the greater portion of their former disconsolate appearance. They reminded my companion of Greece: it was five years, he said, since he had slept in such beds. The influence of the recollections excited by this circumstance on our conversation gradually faded, and I retired to rest with no unpleasant sensations, thinking of our journey tomorrow, and of the pleasure of recounting the little adventures of it when we return.”

I’m sure the beds have much improved, and if you’re got a couple a million handy and looking for a beautiful location to live in France with a literary history, this might be a golden opportunity.

Photos Courtesy Leggett Prestige BNPS

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Free Frankenstein Audiobook from Audible for Pandemic Listening

Mary Shelley's Frankenstein Dan StevensIn the face of the coronavirus pandemic, Audible is stepping forward to serve all those closed schools, kids, and stay-at-homes with free access to a broad assortment of titles, mostly works in the public domain of classic literature, fable and fairy tales and children’s stories. One of them available without requiring a password or login is Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus, narrated by Dan Stevens of Downton Abbey fame.

The free audiobooks are available at stories.audible.com.

Other classics include the likes of Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, narrated by Thandie Newton of Westworld, and Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Return of Sherlock Holmes, Jack London’s Call of the Wild , Rudyard Kipling’s Jungle Book, Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and children’s titles like Winnie The Pooh. and Beatrix Potter stories.

The intent is for learning opportunities for younger folks, but while you’re at home waiting for the Covid-19 epidemic to pass by your door, why not read up on a few classics.

According to the Audible site: “For as long as schools are closed, we’re open. Starting right now, young and old everywhere you go can quickly stream an amazing selection of stories, including titles in six distinctive languages, that will assist them to go on dreaming, studying.”

All stories in five collections are free to stream to desktop, laptop, phone or tablet.

If you want to listen to Mary Shelley’s Secret Memoirs for a free trial with a signup if you’re new to audiobooks. Free with Trial at Audible.

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Frankenstein Diaries: Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley – Paperback

Frankenstein’s New Game “The Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature”

wanderer_frankensteins_creatureMary Shelley’s Frankenstein story continues to inspire new iterations. Soon to come, beginning this Halloween to a mobile or game screen is The Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature, a narrative exploration/adventure game from developer La Belle Games and French TV network ARTE France. The game invites players to take the point of view of the Frankenstein creature and write their own take of the story journey of Mary Wollstonecraft’s Shelley famous novel, where the choices made in the course of the game will affect the ending.

This world of the gothic story is designed with bright and vibrant colors with a universe based on 18th Century Paintings. The background landscapes change over the course of play with a soundtrack to lend an emotional tone to the creature’s journey. The experience is to draw the played into a wanderlust feeling of discovery drawn from the classic original novel.

Through the creature you travel across Europe in an introspective quest of self-discovery. You begin as a created being with no concept if you are good or evil. You wander the land with no memory and no past, where the evolving landscapes based on the emotions of discovery blend reality and fiction as your encounters with humankind shape a future destiny from the choices you make> of your experiences. You cannot escape learning and accepting where you came from as you meet humans and make life and death choices. Some experiences will be pleasant joys and some bitter brutal sorrow, but each station of growth brings you closer to the truth of your existence and tells your ending.

In a prequel game, you play 18-year-old Mary at the villa by Lake Geneva in the well-known  ghost story dare with Lord Byron, Percy and Claire by the fireside. You have to speak up and tell your own story in a room full of famous romantic detractors. Perhaps rather inspired by the beginning of the Bride of Frankenstein movie version, you start with the gothic summer before beginning your journey.

The Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature launches October 31, 2019 and will be downloadable from Steam, coming to Switch, PC, Android, and iOS.
Official Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature site here ARTE.

Youtube Wanderer Game Trailer

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley – Paperback

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